Technical Field
[0001] The present invention relates to the field of solar cells. More particularly, it
relates to a multiple-junction photoelectric device comprising in sequence a substrate,
a first conducting layer, a stack of amorphous silicon or silicon alloys elementary
photoelectric devices (absorbing blue to red light, possibly infrared with SiGe alloys)
and microcrystalline elementary photoelectric devices (absorbing red to infrared),
and a second conducting layer. The invention also relates to a method for producing
this multiple-junction device.
[0002] A particularly advantageous application of the present invention is for the production
of photovoltaic cells intended for generating electrical energy, but the invention
also applies, more generally, to any structure in which an incoming radiation is converted
into an electrical signal, such as photodetectors and ionizing radiation detectors.
Background of the invention
[0003] Thin film silicon solar cells can be produced in superstrate (pin) and substrate
(nip) configurations, with structures consisting of stacked cells in pin-pin or nip-nip
configurations with two or more than two stacked cells to produce multi-junctions
solar cells. The thin film silicon cells are hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H)
and hydrogenated microcrystalline silicon (µc-Si:H) cells, which can thus be used
in stacked conjunction in order to optimize the use of the full solar spectrum, allowing
for improved efficiencies. The development of high-efficiency thin-film silicon solar
cells in the different configurations then requires a cell design allowing for a high
light trapping while maintaining optimum cell electrical properties. An improved light
management in the cells is decisive in order to lead to increased effective light
paths in the absorbing film and thus to the possible use of thinner photo-active layers
in the cells. While this is important for production throughput and cost reduction,
improved light trapping and the use of thin intrinsic layers are mandatory to achieve
higher conversion efficiencies because of inherent material properties. For hydrogenated
amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), the impact onto the cell performance of the light induced
degradation of the bulk material (Staebler-Wronski effect) can be reduced in thinner
films. In the case of microcrystalline silicon (µc-Si:H), light trapping is mandatory
to compensate the low absorption due to the indirect band-gap, so as to allow for
the use of µc-Si:H layers with thicknesses not impacting the cell electrical properties.
[0004] Light trapping is obtained by introducing a textured interface, either by having
a glass substrate coated with transparent and nanotextured materials or by coating
an opaque substrate with a rough structure. The light is scattered at the rough interfaces,
in transmission and/or in reflection at the textured interfaces of the structure.
This scattering can increase the effective path length of each photon through the
absorber layer (if the light diffusion takes place at high angles) and can lead to
multiple internal reflections in the devices. These two combined effects lead to light
trapping in the solar cell and can multiply the optical thickness of the absorber
layer without requiring an increase in the physical thickness of the photo-active
layer. Typical values for the light path enhancement of 5 to 20 are reported in the
literature. The typical lateral feature size (D) and root-mean-square (rms) roughness
(Rrms) of the features required for light trapping in a-Si:H cells are in the range
of D=100-300 nm and Rrms 50-200 nm, and for the µc-Si:H and multi-junction cells incorporating
a µc-Si:H junction in the range of D=200-2000 nm and Rrms=50-500 nm.
[0005] Several textured surfaces of either the substrate or of the transparent conductive
oxide (TCO) layer that precede the silicon deposition were developed demonstrating
enhanced light management and therefore increased short circuit current densities
in both a-Si:H and µc-Si:H based thin film silicon solar cells. Textured SnO
2 deposited by APCVD, sputtered-etched ZnO, low pressure chemical vapor deposition
(LPCVD) ZnO are such demonstrated solutions. For instance, LPCVD ZnO films are polycrystalline
films constituted of large grains, with a surface characterized by large pyramidal
features, which provide to LPCVD as-grown ZnO good light scattering ability. The pyramidal
features characteristics of the layers can be varied by a control of the growth conditions
and by variations of the layer thickness, resulting in a control over which wavelengths
are preferentially scattered.
[0006] In all generality though, there is strong drawback of most light scattering schemes.
[0007] A strong problem that occurs in the realization of devices is that when rough structures
are introduced to realize an efficient light scattering, they also tend to create
in-homogeneities and defects in the absorber layers of the solar cell, resulting in
possible local current drains such as low-quality diodes or physical shunts. This
effect was shown to be universal and applies for all rough (rms > 50 nm) superstrates
and susbtrates electrodes presenting "sharp" features in the sense of valley with
short radius of curvature (typically smaller than 100 nm) or facets with inclinations
higher than 20°. This is particularly true for the µc-Si:H cell which is particularly
affected by the substrate morphology.
[0008] In particular, µc-Si:H solar cells deposited on rough LPCVD ZnO, or rough SnO
2, or rough pyramidal structures, suffer from losses in V
oc and FF, caused by the local low-quality materials formation resulting from the rough
substrate morphology. As almost always, for instance when increasing the roughness
of the ZnO, the short circuit current (J
sc) of cells increases, but the efficiency is not maximized due to the losses in V
oc and FF. Conversely, µc-Si:H cells prepared on flat substrates show very high V
oc and FF, but suffer from sub-optimal J
sc. This is also true for solar cells prepared on opaque back-reflector.
[0009] This effect, which is detrimental for microcrystalline silicon cell, was demonstrated
to have a strong impact in multi-junction solar cells. After the growth of the amorphous
silicon top cells, cracks continue to propagate or even start to grow in the microcrystalline
silicon layer. Hence, it is particularly true for multi-junctions devices that the
growth of the a-Si:H cell, possibly of the intermediate reflector and of the recombination
junction can lead to a surface morphology even more prone to induce cracks and low
quality material regions in the growth of the subsequent microcrystalline silicon
cell. This leads to strong reduction of V
oc and FF. Indeed many solar cell production lines worldwide are fighting with this
effect. Hence it is of critical importance to avoid the detrimental effects of such
cracks in the multi-junctions cell.
[0010] A first approach to accommodate for the local low-quality materials regions acting
as local current drains is therefore to reduce their density in the solar cell. This
has to be done while not impacting too strongly the substrate morphology in order
to conserve a good light trapping. This can be realized to some extent via optimizations
of the deposition process in order to have a bulk material growth more adapted to
sharp surface features. Another solution is to modify the textured surface morphology
in order to smooth the sharp valleys while maintaining the peak textures. This can
be realized for cells incorporating textured LPCVD ZnO by applying a post-plasma treatment
that will smooth the surface. If the radius of curvature at the bottom of the valley
is reduced, the V
oc and FF are increased thanks to a reduction of the density of the local low-quality
material regions. A drawback of such solution is however that the texture is modified;
therefore lowering the light trapping potential and decreasing short circuit current
density. Finally and in more general terms, the use of textured substrates with a
reduced roughness also allows for a decreased density of local current drains, the
amorphous silicon top cell can even tend to slightly smoothen out the initial surface
if the surface texture dimensions are lower to that of the cell. However, a less pronounced
texture will here again lead to a reduced light trapping potential. The optimum textured
surface has therefore to lead to an optimum tradeoff between light trapping ability
(short circuit current) and density of low-quality material regions and local current
drains (V
oc and FF). Such optimum texture is difficult to achieve and none of the actual developed
solutions have permitted such breakthrough.
[0011] In conclusion, a controlled growth of a high material quality can first result in
improved performance of µc-Si:H cells onto textured substrates. However, while it
does not show to be sufficient for highly textured substrates which have higher light
trapping potential, this optimization of the deposition process require precise deposition
conditions, therefore rendering the cell properties and reliability sensitive to drift
in deposition process and to nonuniformities in the reactor, strongly impacting yield
and robustness of the cell design. Finally, the reduction of the density of locally
low quality diodes can be realized with proper optimization of the structured interface,
but always at the price of reduced light trapping potential.
Summary of the invention
[0012] The present invention provides a multiple-junction photoelectric device which allows
to alleviate the disadvantages of the prior art.
[0013] Accordingly, the present invention relates to a multiple-junction photoelectric device
comprising in sequence a substrate, a first conducting layer, at least two elementary
photoelectric devices, at least one of said elementary photoelectric devices being
made of microcrystalline silicon, and a second conducting layer. The first conducting
layer has a surface facing said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device such that:
- said surface has a lateral feature size (D) bigger than 100 nm, preferably bigger
than 200 nm, and smaller than 1500 nm and a root-means-square roughness (Rrms) bigger
than 40 nm, preferably bigger than 60 nm and even more preferably bigger than 100
nm, and smaller than 500 nm,
- said surface comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is greater than 20°, where α50 is the angle for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the surface of the first
conducting layer have an inclination equal to or less than this angle, and
- said surface comprises valleys being formed between two elementary surfaces and having
a radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm.
[0014] Moreover, said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device comprises,
on the incoming light side, a p-type layer being made of at least one silicon alloy
SiM
x where M is O, C, N, and x> 0.1, said p-type layer containing silicon grains.
[0015] Preferably, the other elementary photoelectric device may be based on amorphous silicon.
[0016] In a nip-nip configuration, the first conducting layer is a back electrode layer
deposited on the substrate, the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device being deposited on the first conducting layer and having a n-i-p configuration,
and the second conducting layer is a top electrode layer. The other elementary photoelectric
device deposited between the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
and the top electrode layer is based on amorphous silicon and has a n-i-p configuration.
[0017] In a pin-pin configuration, the substrate is transparent, the first conducting layer
is a top electrode layer being deposited on said substrate, the second conducting
layer is a back electrode layer, and the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device has a p-i-n configuration. The other elementary photoelectric device is deposited
between the first conductive layer and the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device, and is based on amorphous silicon with a p-i-n configuration.
[0018] The present invention relates also to a method for producing a multi-junction photoelectric
device as defined above and comprising the following steps of:
- providing a substrate on which a first conducting layer has been deposited, the first
conducting layer having, opposite to the substrate, a surface such that:
- said surface has a lateral feature size (D) bigger than 100 nm, preferably bigger
than 200 nm, and smaller than 1500 nm and a root-means-square roughness (Rrms) bigger
than 40 nm, preferably bigger than 60 nm and even more preferably bigger than 100nm,
and smaller than 500 nm,
- said surface comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is greater than 20°, where α50 is the angle for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the surface of the first
conducting layer have an inclination equal to or less than this angle, and
- said surface comprises valleys being formed between two elementary surfaces and having
a radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm,
- depositing at least two elementary photoelectric devices, at least one of said elementary
photoelectric devices being made of microcrystalline silicon, said microcrystalline
silicon elementary photoelectric device comprising, on the incoming light side, a
p-type layer being made of at least one silicon alloy SiMX where M is O, C, N, and x> 0.1, said p-type layer containing silicon grains, and
- depositing a second conducting layer.
[0019] Preferably, the other elementary photoelectric device is based on amorphous silicon.
Brief description of the drawings
[0020] Figure 1 is a schematic cross-section view of a a-Si:H/µc-Si:H double-junction solar
cell in pin-pin configuration, according to the invention;
[0021] Figure 2 shows a diagram illustrating the calculation of the angle of inclination
of the surface at the point A of an atomic force microscopy (AFM) image;
[0022] Figure 3 is a schematic cross-section view of a a-Si:H/µc-Si:H double-junction solar
cell in nip-nip configuration, according to the invention;
[0023] Figure 4 shows the angle histograms of two different top electrodes layers used in
the examples;
[0024] Figure 5 is an EFTEM pane-view image of the SiO
x layers used in the device of the invention showing presence on silicon grains (white)
in the SiO
x material;
[0025] Figures 6a to 6c show respectively the dark conductivity, the optical gap E
04 and the percentage of Raman Si crystalline fraction for different CO
2/SiH
4 ratio used to obtain a p-SiO
x layer;
[0026] Figure 7a shows the electrical cell characteristics obtained for a single-junction
cell comprising a p-µc-Si layer and a cell comprising a p-µc-SiO
X layer deposited on a smoothened top electrode layer;
[0027] Figure 7b shows the electrical cell characteristics obtained for a single junction
microcrystalline cell comprising a p-µc-Si layer and a cell comprising a p-µc-SiO
X layer deposited on a very rough top electrode layer with the same feature size (D)
and similar Rrms as in Figure 7a, but with highly inclined facets and valleys with
short radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm;
[0028] Figure 8 shows the cell efficiencies of single-junction microcrystalline cells on
very rough top electrode layers as a function of the deposition regimes for cells
comprising a p-µc-Si layer and for cells comprising a p-µc-SiO. layer;
[0029] Figure 9 represents the current as a function of the voltage for a micromorph cell
(a-Si:H/µc-Si:H tandem cell) deposited on a very rough top electrode layer comprising
a bottom cell with a p-µc-Si layer and for a micromorph cell comprising a bottom cell
with a p-µc-SiO
x layer;
[0030] Figure 10 represents the external quantum efficiency (EQE) as a function of wavelength
for the same cells as in figure 9;
[0031] Figure 11 represents the normalized efficiency as a function of the treatment time
for micromorph solar cells deposited on highly textured LPCVD ZnO front contacts with
different plasma treatments, and
[0032] Figure 12 represents the Open Circuit Voltage (VOC) as a function of the plasma treatment
time of front contact for micromorph solar cells deposited on highly textured LPCVD
ZnO front contacts with different plasma treatments.
Detailed description
[0033] In the present description, the term "back electrode layer" means the electrode layer
which is the farthest away from the incoming light side. It is usually associated
with a back-reflector effect, to reflect the light in the cell. The term "top electrode
layer" means the electrode layer or the electrode system layers which is the closest
to the incoming light side.
[0034] In the present description, the term "microcrystalline silicone" means a mixed phase
material containing silicon nanocrystals and amorphous tissue.
[0035] In reference to Figure 1, a a-Si:H/µc-Si:H double-junction (micromorph) solar cell
12 is shown, representing one amongst different possible multi-junction configurations.
[0036] The cell 12 comprises in sequence a first conducting layer 2, corresponding to the
top electrode layer, deposited on a substrate 4, an amorphous silicon elementary photoelectric
top device 10, an intermediate layer 14, a microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
bottom device 6, and a second conducting layer 8, corresponding to the back electrode
layer.
[0037] The substrate 4 may be made of a material chosen from the group comprising glass
and plastics (for example PEN, PET and polyimide). The top electrode 2 is made of
a transparent conducting oxide (for example ZnO, ITO or SnO
2). Said top electrode 2 has, on the incoming light side, a top face 2a and, on the
other side, a bottom face 2b.
[0038] The back electrode layer 8 is made of a transparent conducting oxide (for example
ZnO, ITO, InO, SnO
2, etc.), a metal (Ag, Al) or the combination of a transparent oxide and a metal. The
top and back electrode layers 2 and 8 are deposited by processes known to those skilled
in the art, such as evaporation, sputtering, and chemical deposition. For the top
electrode layer 2, it is preferred to use the chemical deposition process (examples:
LP-CVD ZnO, AP-CVD SnO
2).
[0039] The intermediate layer 14 can be deposited between the amorphous silicon top device
10 and the microcrystalline silicon bottom device 6. The intermediate layer 14 consists
of a layer of a material chosen from the group comprising zinc oxide, doped silicon
oxides, doped porous silicon oxides, tin oxide, indium oxide, doped silicon carbide,
doped amorphous silicon, doped microcrystalline silicon and combinations thereof.
Preferably, doped silicon oxide is used.
[0040] Preferably, the intermediate layer 14 has a thickness of between 10 nm and 500 nm,
more preferably between 50 nm and 150 nm.
[0041] Alternatively, instead of one a-Si top cell, several amorphous silicon or silicon
alloys can be used to form a multi-junction device.
[0042] The photoelectric devices 6 and 10 may have a p-i-n or p-n configuration.
[0043] The amorphous photoelectric device 10, is based on amorphous silicon or on a silicon
compound (for example SiC, SiO, SiGe, etc.). It has a thickness of between 20 and
800 nm, preferably between 100 nm and 250 nm. As such amorphous elementary photoelectric
device is well known from one skilled in the art, no further description is needed.
[0044] According to the invention, the bottom face 2b of the top electrode 2, which corresponds
to the surface of the first conducting layer facing the microcrystalline silicon photoelectric
device 6 is such that:
- said surface 2b has a lateral feature size (D) bigger than 100 nm, preferably bigger
than 200 nm, and smaller than 1500 nm and a root-means-square roughness (Rrms) bigger
than 40 nm, preferably bigger than 60 nm and even more preferably bigger than 100nm,
and smaller than 500 nm,
- said surface 2b comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is \ greater than 20°, where α50 is the angle for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the surface of the first
conducting layer 2 have an inclination equal to or less than this angle, and
- said surface 2b comprises valleys being formed between two elementary surfaces and
having a radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm.
[0045] Referring to figure 2, the morphology of the surface is described here by the inclinations
of the elementary surfaces making up the rough surface of the specimen, also called
the angular distribution of the surface. To do this, an AFM measurement is carried
out on a surface measuring 5 µm x 5 µm corresponding to a matrix of 256 x 256 equidistant
points (x and y axes in the conventional coordinate system) which represents the topology
(z axis) of the surface of the specimen. To remove any inclination or curvature of
the substrate, the 2nd-order polynomial that minimizes the sum of the squared differences
between itself and the surface is subtracted from this image. What is thus obtained
is a good representation of the morphology of the surface S, which typically consists
of structures having sizes between 50 and 2000 nm. The plane z=0 is defined as being
the horizontal plane P.
[0046] To obtain the angular distribution of the surfaces, the angle between the vector
normal to the horizontal plane P and the vector Vn normal to the surface S is calculated
for each point A in the AFM image. To do this, the relevant elementary surface for
calculating the normal to the point A is defined by the point A and two vectors Vx
and Vy. Vx is the vector that connects the two points (close neighbours in the AFM
matrix) before and after the point A in the direction x and Vy is the vector that
connects the two points (close neighbours in the AFM matrix) before and after the
point A in the direction y. The vector Vn normal to the elementary surface in question
is determined by the vector product of Vx and Vy. The angle of inclination α of the
elementary surface is defined as the angle between the normal vector Vn of the elementary
surface in question and the vector normal to the horizontal plane P.
[0047] A new matrix of points representing the inclination of each elementary surface at
each point in the AFM matrix may be constructed. Starting from the matrix that indicates
the inclination at each point of the surface, it is possible to produce a histogram
of the angles from 0 to 90° (angular distribution) that gives the proportion of the
surface which has an inclination lying within a certain angle interval (typically
2 degrees) (cf. Figure 4). The angles are plotted on the x-axis. The proportion of
elementary surfaces having an inclination to the horizontal plane equal to a given
angle is plotted on the y-axis. A flat horizontal surface is defined as one where
all the elementary surfaces have an inclination an angle of equal to 0°. In contrast,
an extremely rough surface, with highly inclined elementary surfaces, shows an angular
distribution with a high proportion of surface elementary surfaces having high angles
of inclination.
[0048] In the present invention, to characterize the morphology of a surface, the value
α in question is the angle α
50 for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the studied surface have an inclination
equal to or less than this angle.
[0049] Preferably, the surface 2b facing said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device 6 comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α
50 is greater than 35°.
[0050] The radius of curvature ρ is the radius of curvature of the valley being formed between
two elementary surfaces as shown on figure 2 of the surface 2b. Preferably, said radius
of curvature is smaller than 25 nm.
[0051] Microcrystalline photoelectric device 6 comprises a p-type layer, optionally a i-type
layer, and a n-type layer. The i-type and n-type layers comprise are well known from
one skilled in the art.
[0052] Moreover, according to the invention, the p-type layer of microcrystalline photoelectric
device 6, on the incoming light side, is made of at least one silicon alloy SiM
X where M is O, C, N, and x> 0.1, said p-type layer containing silicon grains in such
a way that the layer remains sufficiently conductive. Such grains are shown by figure
5.
[0053] Said p-type layer has a planar resistivity comprised between 10
3 and 10
8 ohms-cm, preferably between 10
5 and 10
6 ohms-cm.
[0054] Preferably, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device 6 is made of a silicon alloy SiM
X where M is O, C, N, or a mixture of O, C, N, and 0.1<x<1.
[0055] Preferably, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device 6 has a refractive index comprised between 2.5 and 3.5 at 600 nm.
[0056] Preferably, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device 6 has an average thickness comprised between 10 nm and 100 nm, preferably comprised
between 10 nm and 60 nm, and more preferably between 15 nm and 30 nm.
[0057] Advantageously, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device 6 has a Raman silicon crystalline fraction greater than 10%.
[0058] In another not shown embodiment, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon
elementary photoelectric device can be, on the light incoming side, preceded by a
stack consisting of a n-type microcrystalline layer, having a thickness comprised
between 5 nm and 25 nm, a n-type SiO
x (0.5<x<2) layer having a thickness comprised between 30 nm and 150 nm, and a n-type
microcrystalline layer having a thickness comprised between 5 nm and 25 nm, said SiO
x layer acting as an optical reflector.
[0059] The photoelectric devices 6 and 10 are deposited by processes known to those skilled
in the art. Preferably, a PECVD (plasma-enhanced chemical vapour deposition) process
is used.
[0060] Advantageously, the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device is a SiO
x layer made by PECVD, with a pressure comprised between 0.5 mbar and 15 mbar, an excitation
frequency comprised between 13 MHz and 110 MHz, a total gas flow comprised between
0.1-5 sccm/cm
2 of substrate area, and gas flow ratios of 0.1-10 for CO
2/SiH
4 and of 0.0001-0.02 for TMB/ SiH
4 or Diborane/SiH
4.
[0061] Preferably, the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device 6 further
comprises a i-type microcrystalline silicon layer, which is deposited at a growth
rate higher than 0.6 nm/s.
[0062] In another embodiment shown in Figure 3, the double-junction solar cell 16 of the
invention has a nip-nip configuration. It comprises in sequence a first conducting
layer 20, corresponding to the back electrode layer, deposited on a substrate 22,
a microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device 18, an intermediate layer
19, an amorphous silicon elementary photoelectric device 21, and a second conducting
layer 24, corresponding to the top electrode layer.
[0063] The back electrode layer is highly reflective. The top electrode layer 24 is a TCO
layer.
[0064] The microcrystalline silicon photoelectric device 18 and the amorphous silicon elementary
photoelectric device 21 have a nip configuration. Said microcrystalline silicon photoelectric
device 18 comprises a n-type layer, optionally a i-type layer, and a p-type layer
as defined above for the pin-pin configuration. The back electrode layer 20 comprises
a top face 20b, which corresponds to the surface of the first conducting layer facing
the microcrystalline silicon photoelectric device 18, which has the same morphology
as defined above for the surface 2b of the pin-pin configuration.
[0065] The present description is based on a cell comprising two photoelectric devices.
Of course, the cell according to the invention may comprise more than two photoelectric
devices.
[0066] The present invention allows improved performance of thin film silicon solar cells
grown onto textured substrates by developing a cell structure which permits to limit
the impact of the local low-quality regions onto the solar cell electrical performance.
The invention relates to the synergic combined use in a thin film silicon solar cell
structure of a highly textured substrate to achieve good light trapping and of a p-type
SiO
x layer that reduces the influence of the cracks/bad diodes on the electrical characteristics
of the solar cell. The proposed cell structure therefore permits to achieve high efficiencies
by allowing for good light trapping without losing too much in electrical characteristics
of the cell. The invention permits to achieve high efficiency cells without the need
of a complex re-structuring of the textured interface, and without the need for very
specific growth conditions to allow for reduced densities of local low-quality diodes.
It therefore allows for a high improvement in the solar cell and module efficiency,
yield and reproducibility. The thin p-type layer used in the invention, comprising
for example microcrystalline SiO
x, as resistive p-layer, in conjunction with a very rough first conducting layer, is
not an additional layer but an internal part of the p-i-n or n-i-p junction. It improves
electrical characteristics of solar cell due to tailored out-of-plane resistance of
p-layer while maintaining the electrical field throughout the device.
Examples:
[0067] The following example illustrates the present invention without however limiting
the scope.
[0068] As the essential features of the invention are linked to the microcrystalline silicon
photoelectric device, some examples of the invention are made without any amorphous
silicon photoelectric device.
Example 1: SiOx layer for better cell performance on very rough substrates
Objectives
[0069] The goal of this experiment is to show that in the standard configuration the electrical
characteristics of µc-Si cells are not improved with the use of a p-SiO
x layer. Furthermore this experiment shows that the electrical characteristics of the
µc-Si cell suffer heavily if a very rough substrate is used. It is shown that when
a p-SiO
x layer is used in combination with this very rough substrate, the electrical characteristics
improve significantly. It is therefore possible with the present invention to make
efficient solar cells on substrates that have been considered too rough before.
Experimental
[0070] The p-SiO
x layers were deposited from a gas mixture of SiH
4, H
2, B(CH
3)
3 and CO
2 by very-high frequency plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) at 110 MHz,
200°C, and with a power density of 0.1 W/cm
2. Layer characterization was performed on ~100 nm thick SiO
x layers deposited on a glass substrate. (in the cells the p-layers will have a thickness
of ~20nm.)
[0071] The optical gap E
04 was determined from fitting spectroscopic ellipsometry measurements to a Tauc-Lorentz
dispersion model including a surface roughness layer. Two aluminum contacts were evaporated
onto the samples, in order to measure the electrical in-plane dark conductivity (σ)
after annealing in vacuum. The crystalline fraction of the silicon phase was measured
by Raman spectroscopy. The same PECVD system was used to deposit 1.5 µm thick µc-Si
cells. The p-µc-Si and p-µc-SiO
X layers were deposited directly onto the front ZnO, without any grading or buffer
layer. Low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LP-CVD) ZnO was used as front and back
electrode. Some of the front electrodes were exposed to surface treatment to render
its morphology more adapted for the growth of the µc-Si cells. After an annealing
at 180°C during three hours, the current-voltage (I-V) curves of the cells were measured
with a dual lamp WACOM solar simulator in standard test conditions (25°C, AM1.5g spectrum,
1000 W/m
2). The short current density (J
sc) was determined by integrating the product of the external quantum efficiency (EQE)
and the incoming photon flux of the AM1.5g spectrum.
pSiOx layer characteristics
[0072] As shown in figures 6a, 6b and 6c, the dark conductivity decreases with increasing
CO
2/SiH
4 gas ratio, the optical gap (E
04) increases and the Raman crystalline fraction of the Si phase decreases. The p-SiO
x layers used in the cells of the present invention are preferably obtained with a
CO
2/SiH
4 gas ratio comprised between 0.5 and 0.7 and have an oxygen concentration of approximately
20 atomic %.
Comparison of cell characteristics with standard µc-Si and µc-SiOX p-layers as used in the present invention
[0073] Two µc-Si cells were produced one after the other. A very rough LPCVD-ZnO layer and
a smoothened LPCVD-ZnO layer were used as front electrodes for both cells.
[0074] Figure 4 shows the angle histogram of such very rough layer (curve A) and such smoothened
layer (curve B).
[0075] For the very rough LPCVD-ZnO layer, the most represented angle in angle histogram
was 46°. The rms-roughness was 150 nm and the lateral feature size (D) was 1 µm.
[0076] For the smoothened LPCVD-ZnO layer, the most represented angle in angle histogram
was 20°. The rms-roughness was 90 nm and the lateral feature size (D) was 1 µm.
[0077] The only difference of the two cells is that one has a standard p-µc-Si layer and
the other a p-µc-SiO
X layer as defined above.
[0078] The results are given in Table below summarizing current-voltage (IV)-characteristics:
| |
Smoothened substrate |
Very rough substrate |
| p-layer used: |
Voc [mV] |
Cell efficiency |
Voc [mV] |
Cell efficiency |
| µc-Si |
514 |
8.2 |
434 |
6.6% |
| µc-SiOx |
518 |
8.7 |
472 |
7.5% |
| Rel. |
+0.8% |
+7.0% |
+8.8% |
+18.2% |
[0079] In Figure 7a, curve C (dotted line) corresponds to the cell comprising a p-µc-Si
layer and curve D (continuous line) corresponds to the cell comprising a p-µc-SiO
x layer. It can be seen from Figure 7a that on the smoothened substrate the electrical
cell characteristics are almost identical. For easier comparison of current-voltage
curves, they have been normalized to Jsc=25mA/cm
2.
[0080] In Figure 7b, curve E corresponds to the cell comprising a p-µc-Si layer and curve
F corresponds to the cell comprising a p-µc-SiO
x layer. It can be seen from Figure 7b, that if a very rough front electrode is used,
the cell characteristics are, surprisingly, significantly increased with the use of
the p-SiO
x layer because the influence of the bad regions is reduced with the p-SiO
x layer.
Example 2: SiOx layer for better cell performance on very rough substrates with a large variety of
different i-layers
Objectives
[0081] The goal of this experiment is to show that the incorporation of the p-layer SiO
x layer improves robustness of the µc-Si:H cell design, as it leads to high efficiency
for different process conditions, while it is shown that these deposition regimes
variations have a strong impact on standard cells efficiencies. The present invention
therefore allows to cope with less restrained deposition parameters windows, clearly
improving yield, uniformity and overall performance for large area modules.
Experimental
[0082] The p-SiO
x layers were deposited from a gas mixture of SiH
4, H
2, B(CH
3)
3 and CO
2 by very-high frequency plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD) at 40 MHz,
180°C, and with a power density of 0.1 W/cm2. The same PECVD system was used to deposit
1.5 µm thick µc-Si cells. The p-µc-Si and p-µc-SiO
X layers were deposited directly onto the front ZnO, without any grading or buffer
layer. Low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LP-CVD) ZnO was used as front and back
electrode. The current-voltage (I-V) curves of the cells were measured with a dual
lamp WACOM solar simulator in standard test conditions (25°C, AM1.5g spectrum, 1000
W/m
2). The short current density (J
sc) was determined by integrating the product of the external quantum efficiency (EQE)
and the incoming photon flux of the AM1.5g spectrum. All cells in this study were
developed onto similar rough LPCVD ZnO front contact.
Comparison of cell characteristics with standard µc-Si and µc-SiOX p-layers as used in the present invention
[0083] In this experiment, 5 different deposition regimes were used for the intrinsic layer
of µc-Si:H single cells. All regimes were developed so as to have a similar growth
rate (1 nm/s) and similar crystalline fractions of the i-layers, while the hydrogen
over silane flux ratio was decreased by going from regime E to regime A. These process
variations allow for an improved efficiency of the µc-Si cells with standard p-layers
when going from regime E to regime A, with conversion efficiencies rising from 6.4
% to 7.9 %. This study therefore shows up to 20 % relative efficiency variations from
one process to another. In parallel, 5 other solar cells were developed using the
same deposition regimes but incorporating the p-SiO
x layer. The results are shown by Figure 8, in which the rounds dots correspond to
the cells comprising a p-µc-SiO
x layer and the square dots correspond to the cells comprising a p-µc-Si layer. Here,
all cells demonstrate high efficiencies from 8.1 % to 8.4 %, which therefore correspond
to a relative efficiency improvement of 4 % to 30 % when compared to the cells using
standard p-layers. The cell efficiency variation between the different processes is
here strongly reduced, as a relative variation of only 3.5 % is demonstrated.
[0084] For a given rough substrate, the density of cracks and their influence on the cell
characteristics can therefore be influenced by changing the deposition condition of
the i-layer. However, while this can assure improved conversion efficiency, it can
lead to i-layer deposition regimes not preferable for industrial process due to other
constraints such as layer homogeneity over large areas, deposition rate, powder formation,
substrate heating, layer characteristics and cell efficiency dependence on tight process
parameters windows, etc... Here the use of the p-SiO
x layer over a large variety of different i-layers quality is shown to allow for high
efficiency for all cells developed, therefore demonstrating that the invention leads
to an important increase of robustness of the cell design versus deposition regime
and i-layer quality variations.
Examples 3: p-SiOx layer in Micromorph cell
[0085] In a first case, two identical micromorph cells deposited on a textured substrate
were produced, with the only difference that the standard p-µc-Si layer of the microcrystalline
bottom cell is replaced with a p-µc-SiO
X layer as defined above. The current-voltage curves are measured.
[0086] The results are shown by Figure 9, in which curve G corresponds to the micromorph
cell comprising a bottom cell with a standard p-µc-Si layer, and curve H corresponds
to the micromorph cell comprising a bottom cell with the p-µc-SiO
X layer. Figure 9 shows that the Voc is increased from 1.16V to 1.28V and the Fill
Factor is increased from 67.2% to 69.8%.
[0087] The external quantum efficiencies of the two cells are shown in Figure 10 in which:
- curves J1, J2 and J3 (continuous lines) show the external quantum efficiency respectively
of the top cell (Jsc-top =12.41 mA/cm2), of the bottom cell (Jsc-bot =12.15 mA/cm2), and the sum of the two sub-cells (Jsc-tot =Jsc-top+Jsc-bot =24.56 mA/cm2) for the micromorph cell comprising a bottom cell with the p-µc-SiOX layer; and
- curves K1, K2 and K3 (dotted lines) show the external quantum efficiency respectively
of the top cell (Jsc-top =12.42 mA/cm2), of the bottom cell (Jsc-bot =11.97 mA/cm2), and the sum of the two sub-cells (Jsc-tot =Jsc-top+Jsc-bot =24.39 mA/cm2) for the micromorph cell comprising a bottom cell with the standard p-µc-Si layer.
[0088] From the external quantum efficiency, as shown in Figure 10, it can be seen that
the p-SiO
x layer does not change the currents in the sub-cells and has a negligible optical
effect.
[0089] In a second case, two series of micromorph cells on LPCVD ZnO rough front contact
with increasing plasma treatment were produced. In the first series all micromorph
cells have a standard p-µc-Si layer in the microcrystalline bottom cell while in the
second series all micromorph cells have a p-µc-SiOx layer in the microcrystalline
bottom cell, as defined above. The current-voltage curves and the efficiencies are
measured.
[0090] The results of efficiencies and of open-circuit voltage are shown in Figures 11 and
12. Figure 11 shows that cells incorporating a p-µc-SiOx layer (points M) in the microcrystalline
bottom cell exhibit improved efficiencies when compared to cells making use of standard
p-µc-Si layers (points N). Figure 12 shows that cells incorporating a p-µc-SiOx layer
in the microcrystalline bottom cell (points M) have stable and high VOC for all cells
while cells integrating standard p-µc-Si layers (points N) have a strong drop of VOC
for the most textured substrates.
[0091] While efficiencies are improved for long plasma treatment in the case of micromorph
cells with a standard p-µc-Si layer in the bottom cell, stable efficiencies for the
different roughnesses are demonstrated for the micromorph cells integrating a p-µc-SiO
x layer in the microcrystalline bottom cell.
[0092] The micromorph cell efficiency improvement is principally realized by maintaining
high VOC cells even on highly textured substrates thanks to the p-µc-SiO
x layer in the microcrystalline bottom cell.
1. Multiple-junction photoelectric device comprising, in sequence, a substrate (4, 22),
a first conducting layer (2, 20), at least two elementary photoelectric devices (6,
10; 18, 21), at least one of said elementary photoelectric devices (6, 18) being made
of microcrystalline silicon, and a second conducting layer (8, 24),
characterized in that:
the first conducting layer (2, 20) has a surface (2b, 20b) facing said microcrystalline
silicon elementary photoelectric device such that:
- said surface (2b, 20b) has a lateral feature size (D) bigger than 100 nm, preferably
bigger than 200 nm, and smaller than 1500 nm and a root-means-square roughness (Rrms)
bigger than 40 nm, preferably bigger than 60 nm and even more preferably bigger than
100 nm, and smaller than 500 nm,
- said surface (2b, 20b) comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is greater than 20°, where α50 is the angle for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the surface of the first
conducting layer (2, 20) have an inclination equal to or less than this angle, and
- said surface (2b, 20b) comprises valleys being formed between two elementary surfaces
and having a radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm,
and in that said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device (6, 18) comprises,
on the incoming light side, a p-type layer being made of at least one silicon alloy
SiMx where M is O, C, N, and x> 0.1, said p-type layer containing silicon grains.
2. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to claim 1, characterized in that said surface (2b, 20b) facing said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device (6, 18) comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is greater than 35°.
3. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 and 2, characterized in that said surface (2b, 20b) facing said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric
device (6, 18) comprises valleys having a radius of curvature smaller than 25 nm.
4. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
(6, 18) is made of a silicon alloy SiMx where M is O, C, N, or a mixture of O, C, N, and 0.1<x<1.
5. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
(6, 18) has a refractive index comprised between 2.5 and 3.5 at 600 nm.
6. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
(6, 18) has an average thickness comprised between 10 nm and 100 nm, preferably comprised
between 10 nm and 60 nm, and more preferably between 15 nm and 30 nm.
7. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
(6, 18) has a Raman silicon crystalline fraction greater than 10%.
8. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that the first conducting layer (20) is a back electrode layer deposited on the substrate
(22), the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device (18) being deposited
on the first conducting layer (20) and having a n-i-p configuration, and the second
conducting layer (24) is a top electrode layer.
9. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to claim 8, characterized in that the other elementary photoelectric device (21) deposited between the microcrystalline
silicon elementary photoelectric device (18) and the top electrode layer is based
on amorphous silicon and has a n-i-p configuration.
10. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to anyone of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that the substrate (4) is transparent, the first conducting layer (2) is a top electrode
layer being deposited on said substrate (4), the second conducting layer (8) is a
back electrode layer, and the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
(6) has a p-i-n configuration.
11. Multiple-junction photoelectric device according to claim 10, characterized in that the other elementary photoelectric device (10) is deposited between the first conductive
layer (2) and the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device (6), and
is based on amorphous silicon with a p-i-n configuration.
12. Multiple-junction device according to claim 11, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
is, on the light incoming side, preceded by a stack consisting of a n-type microcrystalline
layer, having a thickness comprised between 5 nm and 25 nm, a n-type SiOx (0.5<x<2) layer having a thickness comprised between 30 nm and 150 nm, and a n-type
microcrystalline layer having a thickness comprised between 5 nm and 25 nm, said SiOx layer acting as an optical reflector.
13. Method for producing a multiple-junction photoelectric device as defined in claims
1 to 12,
characterized in that it comprises the following steps of:
- providing a substrate (4, 22) on which a first conducting layer (2, 20) has been
deposited, the first conducting layer (2, 20) having, opposite to the substrate (4,22),
a surface (2b, 20b) such that:
- said surface (2b, 20b) has a lateral feature size (D) bigger than 100 nm, preferably
bigger than 200 nm, and smaller than 1500 nm and a root-means-square roughness (Rrms)
bigger than 40 nm, preferably bigger than 60 nm and even more preferably bigger than
100nm, and smaller than 500 nm,
- said surface (2b, 20b) comprises inclined elementary surfaces such that α50 is greater than 20°, where α50 is the angle for which 50% of the elementary surfaces of the surface of the first
conducting layer (2, 20) have an inclination equal to or less than this angle, and
- said surface (2b, 20b) comprises valleys being formed between two elementary surfaces
and having a radius of curvature smaller than 100 nm,
- depositing at least two elementary photoelectric devices (6, 10; 18, 21), at least
one of said elementary photoelectric devices (6, 18) being made of microcrystalline
silicon, said microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device (6, 18) comprising,
on the incoming light side, a p-type layer being made of at least one silicon alloy
SiMx where M is O, C, N, and x> 0.1, said p-type layer containing silicon grains, and
- depositing a second conducting layer (8, 24).
14. Method according to claim 13, characterized in that the other elementary photoelectric device (10, 21) is based on amorphous silicon.
15. Method according to anyone of claims 13 and 14, characterized in that the p-type layer of the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device
is a SiOx layer made by PECVD, with a pressure comprised between 0.5 and 15 mbar, an excitation
frequency comprised between 13 MHz and 110 MHz, a total gas flow comprised between
0.1-5 sccm/cm2 of substrate area, and gas flow ratios of 0.1-10 for CO2/SiH4 and of 0.0001-0.02 for TMB/SiH4 or Diborane/SiH4.
16. Method according to any of claims 13 to 15, characterized in that the microcrystalline silicon elementary photoelectric device (6, 18) further comprises
a i-type microcrystalline silicon layer, which is deposited at a growth rate higher
than 0.6 nm/s.